Monday, October 6, 2014

The "WTF?" Moment

In a recent “newsletter”, one of many that
crash-land in my InBox each day, were the following observations:

President Barack Obama
said, in a speech at Northwestern University:

"I
am not on the ballot this fall … But make no mistake: [My] policies are on the
ballot - every single one of them."

The
primary thrust of the newsletter was that this latest “Me My Mine” from the
Narcissist-in-Chief was a big deal. Quoting a WaPo weekend piece from Dan Balz:
"This
is an election that is … very much about how people view President Obama."

After running thru the (highly questionable, always rigged) unemployment
figures which showed an (alleged) drop below 6% and what Good News that was
(guffaw guffaw), polling results revealed a giant yawn result from those who
answered their phone. Conclusion: Assuming (and that takes a pretty big Ass)
that the “economy is improving”, it ain’t being felt by families sitting around
the Meager Scraps table.

Quoting from the newsletter: “As we come around the home turn before
heading into the stretch run toward the November 4 elections, these are the
kinds of things that can - and very well may - sway close elections. Voters
will, like it or not, watch more commercials and pay more attention from here
on out.”

As for the "policies
on the ballot" line, Balz wrote:

"That
comment may have rattled nervous Democrats looking to keep their distance from
the president, but it is the reality they know they must live with for the next
four weeks."

And
from the Gallup folks:

"Obama
himself may choose to be less active in campaigning for Democrats to avoid
hurting Democratic candidates' chances."

Which brings me to my Every Election Cycle “WTF?”
Moment. Are politicians, strategists, pundits, commentators and, above all, “voters”,
really, really, really that stupid? Ignorant? Disengaged? Can 4-6 weeks of
intense, partisan bullshit called “political ads” swamping TV actually “sway”
voters? Juding from the Vercacity Content of your typical political ad, the “message”
is either a total lie, scam, appeal to some prejudice/”special interest” or as vacuous
as a peeled balloon. Have YOU ever made up or changed yoiur mind about a
candidate or issue solely on the basis of 30 seconds of USDA Prime Crapola? If
you answered “yes”, you have my sympathy and sincere hope you will have – or will
– move to a higher plane of understanding of how all this really, really works. Start here...